The Day

▪ State to test all held in prisons, jails and psychiatri­c facilities for COVID-19.

- By KELAN LYONS The Connecticu­t Mirror Kelan Lyons is a reporter for The Connecticu­t Mirror (www.ctmirror.org). Copyright 2020 © The Connecticu­t Mirror. klyons@ctmirror.org

Officials will test all people incarcerat­ed in state prisons and jails, as well as those in state-run inpatient psychiatri­c facilities, for COVID-19 as part of Connecticu­t’s screening of vulnerable and high-risk groups.

The state also will test all front-line staff at correction­s facilities and Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services psychiatri­c hospitals.

“We want to get all of them tested in the ramp-up phase, which starts next week,” said Max Reiss, Gov. Ned Lamont’s spokespers­on. “Whether you’re in a DMHAS facility or in a hospital, in a health care facility, or nursing home, or correction­s facility, we want to have the best data possible regarding the spread and regarding transmissi­on.”

Reiss said the goal is to test all inmates, patients in psychiatri­c hospitals, and Department of Correction DMHAS front-line staff by the end of June.

Connecticu­t’s prison population has fallen dramatical­ly since March 1. There were 1,632 fewer people behind bars on May 8 than the first day of March.

As of Thursday, 484 inmates and 361 staff members had tested positive for COVID-19. More than 210 employees and 345 incarcerat­ed people had been medically cleared and recovered. Six incarcerat­ed people have died.

Officials at correction­al facilities in Ohio and Pennsylvan­ia found that the outbreaks among their incarcerat­ed population­s were much higher than previously thought after they tested inmates en masse.

“The more tests you do, the more positives you’re going to get,” Reiss said. “At the beginning, we were testing 20 people a day, then 60 people a day. And now we have much better data but still, we’re falling way short because we know there are segments of the population, both in congregate facilities and out in the public, that aren’t getting tested.”

Though the population­s are different, there are several factors shared by many incarcerat­ed people and patients in state-run psychiatri­c facilities.

“In the middle of a pandemic the way they are most similar is they are both in living conditions that are congregate settings where it is difficult, if not impossible, to maintain social distancing,” said Kathy Flaherty, executive director of the Connecticu­t Legal Rights Project, Inc., which recently sued the state to protect patients at Whiting Forensic and Connecticu­t Valley Hospitals from COVID-19. “The other way they’re similar is there are people in Department of Correction who have been incarcerat­ed for behaviors that derive from their disability because we’ve criminaliz­ed a lot of those things, and chose to punish people and incarcerat­e them rather than provide treatment in the community.”

DMHAS operates more than 760 mental health and substance use beds and employs approximat­ely 3,300 people throughout the state-operated service system.

As of May 5, 60 patients and 69 staff at DMHAS facilities had tested positive for the virus.

“Testing of all patients and all staff on all shifts, regardless of symptoms, is the only way (DMHAS) will effectivel­y be able to get a handle on what’s going on in the inpatient facilities, where it is difficult to maintain the social distancing that is keeping so many of us safe in our homes,” Flaherty said.

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